Partnering with Icelantic skis, the tourism bureau will host the first-ever winter concert at Red Rocks on January 27. Details – like which steely fingered band will be melting the certainly snowy venue – are coming next week.

Cancellation of Denver Big Air blamed everything except the real cause. It was nothing more than a knockoff of an XGames event that neither the athletes, ski/snowboard companies, or sponsors wanted to be a part of. Freezing your ass off in the cold for a concert ought to be a lot of fun, especially for the SIA tradeshow participants after a day of working the floors. Where do I sign up?

Superbad

Wow….clearly you don’t embrace the CO lifestyle snowsport spirit…why don’t you move back to the east coast.

Here in the mountains we’ve had plenty of outdoor shows in winter, which can be a lot of fun. I’ve seen Devotchka twice in a snowstorm and Weezer outside on a cold night in Vail. Chances are a night at Red Rocks would be a lot warmer … why not give it a try? (PS: Los Lobos is playing a show in downtown Breck Dec. 16 — if they can do it at 9,600 feet in December …)

Here in the mountains we’ve had plenty of outdoor shows in winter, which can be a lot of fun. I’ve seen Devotchka twice in a snowstorm and Weezer outside on a cold night in Vail. Chances are a night at Red Rocks would be a lot warmer … why not give it a try? (PS: Los Lobos is playing a show in downtown Breck Dec. 16 — if they can do it at 9,600 feet in December …)

Here in the mountains we’ve had plenty of outdoor shows in winter, which can be a lot of fun. I’ve seen Devotchka twice in a snowstorm and Weezer outside on a cold night in Vail. Chances are a night at Red Rocks would be a lot warmer … why not give it a try? (PS: Los Lobos is playing a show in downtown Breck Dec. 16 — if they can do it at 9,600 feet in December …)

Winter concerts are not new to Colorado – X-Games and Vail’s Snow Daze attracts thousands every year and with headliners like Weezer and Dwight Yoakam and Snoop Dog a little bit of snow isn’t going to stop fans! In fact, Coloradoan’s love that shit. The only question is ‘what the hell took so long?’

Emilie Rusch covers retail and commercial real estate for The Post. A Wisconsin native and Mizzou graduate, she moved to Colorado in 2012. Before that, she worked at a small daily newspaper in South Dakota. It's the one with Mount Rushmore.